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POL 4410 Global environmental policy
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POL 4410 Global environmental policy. Structure 1. Global Warming: the evidence 2. Global Warming: the political economy 3. Potential policies 4. From.

Jan 19, 2016

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Page 1: POL 4410 Global environmental policy. Structure 1. Global Warming: the evidence 2. Global Warming: the political economy 3. Potential policies 4. From.

POL 4410Global environmental policy

Page 2: POL 4410 Global environmental policy. Structure 1. Global Warming: the evidence 2. Global Warming: the political economy 3. Potential policies 4. From.

Structure

1.Global Warming: the evidence

2.Global Warming: the political economy

3.Potential policies

4.From Kyoto to the Stern Review

Page 3: POL 4410 Global environmental policy. Structure 1. Global Warming: the evidence 2. Global Warming: the political economy 3. Potential policies 4. From.

The Evidence

•Increasing scientific consensus of global warming by over 2 degrees C by end of century

•Likely upper bound now over 6 degrees

•Evidence supports man-made effect

Page 4: POL 4410 Global environmental policy. Structure 1. Global Warming: the evidence 2. Global Warming: the political economy 3. Potential policies 4. From.

Gore...

•Earth in the Balance

•An Inconvenient Truth

Page 5: POL 4410 Global environmental policy. Structure 1. Global Warming: the evidence 2. Global Warming: the political economy 3. Potential policies 4. From.

vs. Inhofe

•Senator for OK (R)

•Chair of Senate Environment and Public Works Committee

•Global warming is ‘greatest hoax ever perpetrated’

•Compares environmentalists to Nazis.

Page 6: POL 4410 Global environmental policy. Structure 1. Global Warming: the evidence 2. Global Warming: the political economy 3. Potential policies 4. From.

Temperature Increase

Page 7: POL 4410 Global environmental policy. Structure 1. Global Warming: the evidence 2. Global Warming: the political economy 3. Potential policies 4. From.

In the long run

Page 8: POL 4410 Global environmental policy. Structure 1. Global Warming: the evidence 2. Global Warming: the political economy 3. Potential policies 4. From.

Carbon and temperature

Page 9: POL 4410 Global environmental policy. Structure 1. Global Warming: the evidence 2. Global Warming: the political economy 3. Potential policies 4. From.

Where is hotter?

Page 10: POL 4410 Global environmental policy. Structure 1. Global Warming: the evidence 2. Global Warming: the political economy 3. Potential policies 4. From.

Where are we heading?

Page 11: POL 4410 Global environmental policy. Structure 1. Global Warming: the evidence 2. Global Warming: the political economy 3. Potential policies 4. From.

Globally by 2100

Page 12: POL 4410 Global environmental policy. Structure 1. Global Warming: the evidence 2. Global Warming: the political economy 3. Potential policies 4. From.

CGIAR Prediction

Page 13: POL 4410 Global environmental policy. Structure 1. Global Warming: the evidence 2. Global Warming: the political economy 3. Potential policies 4. From.

2001 IPCC Report

• Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change

• Led by government scientists but includes several hundred academics.

• Reports are based on peer-reviewed articles.

• 2001 estimates are 1.4 to 5.8C surface temp rise and 0.1 to 0.9m sea level rise.

• Not a single published article between 1993 and 2000 denied global warming

Page 14: POL 4410 Global environmental policy. Structure 1. Global Warming: the evidence 2. Global Warming: the political economy 3. Potential policies 4. From.

Opponents

•Heat island argument

•Consensus not enough

•Climate models unreliable

•Economic tradeoffs

Page 15: POL 4410 Global environmental policy. Structure 1. Global Warming: the evidence 2. Global Warming: the political economy 3. Potential policies 4. From.

The Political Economy

•Externalities

•Intergenerational Tradeoffs

•Current inequality and development

•Discounting and time inconsistency

Page 16: POL 4410 Global environmental policy. Structure 1. Global Warming: the evidence 2. Global Warming: the political economy 3. Potential policies 4. From.

Advocates of Kyoto

•Western Europe

•Service sector workers

•Environmentalists

•Developing states

•Fans of Emissions trading

Page 17: POL 4410 Global environmental policy. Structure 1. Global Warming: the evidence 2. Global Warming: the political economy 3. Potential policies 4. From.

Enemies of Kyoto

•Energy companies

•Russia

•United States of America

•Manufacturers

•Nationalists

•Bjorn Lomborg!

Page 18: POL 4410 Global environmental policy. Structure 1. Global Warming: the evidence 2. Global Warming: the political economy 3. Potential policies 4. From.

Potential Policies

1.Emissions Caps plus Trading

2.Carbon Taxation

3.Value at Risk

Page 19: POL 4410 Global environmental policy. Structure 1. Global Warming: the evidence 2. Global Warming: the political economy 3. Potential policies 4. From.

Emissions Trading•Agreed at Kyoto to reduce levels of

emissions to 1990 level and introduce system of trading.

•Each state would be given a quota. If they exceed quota they can buy from other states. If they do not meet quota they can sell.

•One way of gauging ‘price’ of pollution.

Page 20: POL 4410 Global environmental policy. Structure 1. Global Warming: the evidence 2. Global Warming: the political economy 3. Potential policies 4. From.

Carbon Tax

•Alternative to quota is to set a flat tax on carbon emissions.

•Must be globally uniform though collected nationally.

•Massive debate over level of tax. Nordhaus wants $10 per ton rising to $60 by 2100. Cline advocates $150 rising to $600.

Page 21: POL 4410 Global environmental policy. Structure 1. Global Warming: the evidence 2. Global Warming: the political economy 3. Potential policies 4. From.

Value at Risk

•Minimax strategy

•Consider reducing damages at 95% of cumulative probability distribution.

•Could be up to 9.3C rise.

•Risk averse strategy. One percent doctrine?

•Precautionary principle.

Page 22: POL 4410 Global environmental policy. Structure 1. Global Warming: the evidence 2. Global Warming: the political economy 3. Potential policies 4. From.

What Else?

•Adaptation: will price signals create incentives to produce emissions reductions?

•Adapting to global warming itself

•Lowering global rate of growth

Page 23: POL 4410 Global environmental policy. Structure 1. Global Warming: the evidence 2. Global Warming: the political economy 3. Potential policies 4. From.

Rio Summit

•1993 Earth Summit held in Rio de Janeiro

•Produced Framework Convention on Climate Change

•Legally non-binding but established possibility of ‘protocols’ that could set emissions levels.

Page 24: POL 4410 Global environmental policy. Structure 1. Global Warming: the evidence 2. Global Warming: the political economy 3. Potential policies 4. From.

Kyoto Protocol•Negotiated in 1997

•Annex I countries should reduce emissions to 95% of 1990 levels by 2012.

•Can meet requirements through emissions trading (EU Emissions Trading Scheme)

•Non Annex I countries do not have to do so.

Page 25: POL 4410 Global environmental policy. Structure 1. Global Warming: the evidence 2. Global Warming: the political economy 3. Potential policies 4. From.

Kyoto

Page 26: POL 4410 Global environmental policy. Structure 1. Global Warming: the evidence 2. Global Warming: the political economy 3. Potential policies 4. From.

Who Pollutes?

Page 27: POL 4410 Global environmental policy. Structure 1. Global Warming: the evidence 2. Global Warming: the political economy 3. Potential policies 4. From.

Bush and Kyoto• Clinton signed but never ratified treaty -

political consensus that developing countries would have to be brought in.

• Bush opposes Kyoto because of China’s exception, ‘debate’ over climate change, and economic costs.

• Blocking of reports by NOAA on effects on hurricanes.

• California legislature agrred to reduce emissions by 25% by 2020.

Page 28: POL 4410 Global environmental policy. Structure 1. Global Warming: the evidence 2. Global Warming: the political economy 3. Potential policies 4. From.

Stern Review: A New Consensus?

•British report headed by Sir Nicholas Stern

•Makes economic case for action

•Predicts GDP will be reduced by between 1% and 10% under Business as Usual

•Recommends carbon pricing, government investment in R&D, carbon finance flows, and ETS.

Page 29: POL 4410 Global environmental policy. Structure 1. Global Warming: the evidence 2. Global Warming: the political economy 3. Potential policies 4. From.

Criticisms of Stern• The usual suspects

• Also DasGupta (Cambridge economist) criticized use of discount rates - Stern gets his answer because he over-values welfare of future inhabitants such that we should save 97.5% income now.

• DeLong notes that DasGupta excluded technological growth from estimate - in fact we should save 22.5% now.

• Parameter choice matters hugely.

Page 30: POL 4410 Global environmental policy. Structure 1. Global Warming: the evidence 2. Global Warming: the political economy 3. Potential policies 4. From.

Political Economy of Agreement

•Intergenerational Tradeoffs

•Growth for poor now vs. growth for everyone later.

•Inclusion of developing states

•What are the likely effects on trade of carbon taxation?

Page 31: POL 4410 Global environmental policy. Structure 1. Global Warming: the evidence 2. Global Warming: the political economy 3. Potential policies 4. From.

Next Class(es)

•Crime: Moises Naim

•Terrorism: Pape and Sandler

•Tuesday: finish up and discuss exam.